The 20mm anti-aircraft guns' rate of fire differs whether the Player is firing them or enemy NPCs are firing them.
The Player is tasked with calling in an airstrike even though the skies are overcast. When the bombers are seen from above, the cloud cover is partial.
The Vickers-Berthier machine gun is a machine gun used by the Indian Army; it is highly unlikely that either the Italians or the Germans would have it in their possession.
20mm anti-aircraft guns do not need a warm-up period before firing.
The L42A1 rifle's magazine was not usually detached in order to reload it.
The Beretta M1934 only holds a maximum of 8 rounds, not 15.
Mortars are depressed in order to fire at distances far away; the mortars shown have this backwards.
Small arms seldom use tracer rounds (except for machine guns).
The rounds from the guns in North Africa take several seconds to hit their targets despite only being about 100 yards away. Field guns are high-velocity and the rounds do not take long to hit.
The guards at the airfield do not react if the searchlights are shot out.
The projector at the airfield sounds like it is running, but it shows a still image (despite there being no film) and the reels are not spinning.
The airfield is nowhere near long enough for aeroplanes to take off and land.
The L42A1 rifle was not introduced until 1970.
The Lee-Enfield No 4 was being introduced in 1943 and would have been uncommon at that time.
No pilot would be fooled into taking off if there were dead bodies scattered around his aeroplane.